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1 tem was Streptococcus pyogenes in Sydenham's chorea.
2 oclonal antibody 24.3.1 and sera from active chorea.
3  correlation with Vonsattel score except for chorea.
4 isorder, and therefore similar to Sydenham's chorea.
5 te the dominant loss of striatal neurons and chorea.
6 e patients had rheumatic fever or Sydenham's chorea.
7 nting with dominant parkinsonism and minimal chorea.
8  inhibitory neurons are involved, also their chorea.
9       None had rheumatic fever or Sydenham's chorea.
10 me, as well as rheumatic fever or Sydenham's chorea.
11 manent basal ganglia dysfunction might cause chorea.
12 on and increasing motor impairments, but not chorea.
13 the BG, is characterized by hyperkinesia and chorea.
14 ollowed by dysarthria, dysphagia, ataxia, or chorea.
15 aviors and involuntary movements in Sydenham chorea.
16 nical features of HD, including dystonia and chorea.
17 provement in dystonia against aggravation of chorea.
18 Most remarkable were the high frequencies of chorea (11%) and cranial neuropathy (17%, including 10%
19     It has been hypothesized that Sydenham's chorea, a major manifestation of rheumatic fever, may pr
20 nes result in a variety of diseases, such as chorea acanthocytosis (ChAc), but the cellular functions
21 tic anemia and resembling the human disorder chorea acanthocytosis.
22 generative hereditary disorders that include chorea-acanthocytosis (ChAc) and McLeod syndrome (MLS).
23                                              Chorea-acanthocytosis (ChAc) is a fatal neurodegenerativ
24                                              Chorea-acanthocytosis (ChAc) is a fatal neurological dis
25                                              Chorea-acanthocytosis (ChAc) is a severe, neurodegenerat
26                      The rare human disorder chorea-acanthocytosis (ChAc) is caused by mutations in h
27                          The gene mutated in chorea-acanthocytosis (CHAC; approved gene symbol VPS13A
28 axias, dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy, chorea-acanthocytosis and iron-accumulation disorders.
29 ion of active Lyn and autophagy was found in chorea-acanthocytosis based on Lyn coimmunoprecipitation
30                                           In chorea-acanthocytosis erythrocytes, active Lyn is seques
31 n associated with Atg7 in healthy but not in chorea-acanthocytosis erythrocytes.
32                       Our results uncover in chorea-acanthocytosis erythroid cells an association bet
33                                              Chorea-acanthocytosis is characterized by circulating ac
34                                              Chorea-acanthocytosis is one of the hereditary neurodege
35 ed K+ channel genes, KCNA5 and KCNA6; 6) the chorea-acanthocytosis locus on 9q21; 7) the Huntington-l
36           In addition, reticulocyte-enriched chorea-acanthocytosis red cell fractions exhibited delay
37       We report here for the first time that chorea-acanthocytosis red cells are characterized by imp
38 es and membrane remnants only in circulating chorea-acanthocytosis red cells.
39                                           In chorea-acanthocytosis, we found (1) dyserythropoiesis; (
40 sease is uncontrolled involuntary movements (chorea) accompanied by progressive cognitive and psychia
41 que clinical presentation of childhood-onset chorea and characteristic brain MRI showing symmetrical
42 ar after Charcot's death, Osler published On Chorea and Choreiform Affectations (1894), and in this p
43 sing CB1 levels are strongly correlated with chorea and cognitive deficit.
44 n patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) are chorea and dystonia, and often the two types are intermi
45 isorder with a distinct phenotype, including chorea and dystonia, incoordination, cognitive decline,
46                                              Chorea and dystonia, usually in the legs, occur less com
47  with various diseases, including Huntington chorea and fragile X syndrome.
48 t Charcot had failed to separate, Sydenham's chorea and Huntington's disease.
49 ive neurologic diseases such as Huntington's chorea and late-stage Parkinson disease.
50 ified Neurological Examination (QNE) and its chorea and motor impairment subscales, the Mini-Mental S
51  11 regions containing genes associated with chorea and myokymia: 1) the Huntington disease gene on c
52                                   Sydenham's chorea and other central nervous system illnesses that a
53 mising etiologically targeted treatments for chorea and other hyperkinetic movement disorders.
54 of autoimmune movement disorders [Sydenham's chorea and PANDAS (pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric
55 been described in association with dystonia, chorea and parkinsonism.
56 bodies (ABGA) are associated with Sydenham's chorea and pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorde
57 es are directed at managing symptoms such as chorea and psychiatric disturbances.
58 mAbs 24.3.1, 31.1.1, and 37.2.1 derived from chorea and selected for cross-reactivity with group A st
59 naling in the immunopathogenesis of Sydenham chorea and will lead to a better understanding of other
60 a hyperkinetic score, combining dystonia and chorea, and (2) a hypokinetic score, combining bradykine
61 n with PANDAS, nine children with Sydenham's chorea, and 24 healthy children were evaluated for D8/17
62 isease,movement disorders, ataxia, dystonia, chorea, and Creutzfeldt-Jakob with and Jewish.
63  and early-onset ataxia with a rapid course, chorea, and dementia.
64  including Alzheimer's disease, Huntington's chorea, and glial tumor; however, the precise function o
65 nted with acute-onset confusion, opsoclonus, chorea, and intractable seizures.
66 riable phenotype including ataxia, dystonia, chorea, and parkinsonism, as well as cognitive impairmen
67 s exhibit neuronal dysfunction/degeneration, chorea, and progressive weight loss.
68 t disorders (parkinsonism, dystonia, tremor, chorea, and restless legs syndrome) were included.
69 ed expression in rheumatic fever, Sydenham's chorea, and subgroups of obsessive-compulsive disorder a
70 rs such as Parkinson's disease, Huntington's chorea, and tardive dyskinesia arise from an imbalance b
71 araneoplastic, such as anti-CRMP5-associated chorea, anti-Ma2 hypokinesis and rigidity, anti-Yo cereb
72                                              Chorea antibodies targeted the surface of human neuronal
73 inhibited is consistent with the theory that chorea arises from selective degeneration of striatal pr
74 d movement disorder (opsoclonus, ataxia, and chorea) as well as seizures refractory to treatment.
75 enazine to deutetrabenazine in patients with chorea associated with Huntington disease (HD).
76                          Among patients with chorea associated with Huntington disease, the use of de
77 of hyperkinetic movement disorders including chorea, ballism, athetosis, dystonia, tremor, myoclonus,
78 ) encephalitis, which may cause dyskinesias, chorea, ballismus or dystonia (NMDAR antibodies), the sp
79      These include migraine, encephalopathy, chorea, brain stem dysfunction, myelopathy, mononeuritis
80  the hallmark autoimmune disorder Sydenham's chorea, but PANDAS remains controversial.
81 cal activity correlated with the severity of chorea, but SMR and total energy expenditure did not.
82  Tourette's syndrome, rather than Sydenham's chorea, but who have similar poststreptococcal autoimmun
83 rted at the age of 3 to 4 years and included chorea, cerebellar ataxia, dystonia, and pyramidal tract
84 ade, and symptom scores of motor impairment, chorea, cognition, and mood.
85 ound previously for subjects with Sydenham's chorea compared with normal subjects.
86 NDAS and 89% of the children with Sydenham's chorea, compared with 17% of the healthy children, were
87                                              Chorea control, as measured by the total maximal chorea
88 e was titrated on a weekly basis for optimal chorea control.
89 le safety profile and effectively maintained chorea control.
90             Tetrabenazine is efficacious for chorea control; however, tolerability concerns exist.
91 in Huntington disease (HD), characterized by chorea, dementia and severe weight loss, culminating in
92 ary neurodegenerative disorder that produces chorea, dementia, and death.
93 idlife onset of debilitating and progressive chorea, dementia, and psychological disturbance.
94                                Reactivity of chorea-derived mAb 24.3.1 or SC IgG with D2R was confirm
95 her streptococcal diseases in the absence of chorea did not activate the kinase.
96 ition, there are recent reports of dystonia, chorea encephalopathy, and dystonic choreoathetosis occu
97      The presence of opsoclonus, ataxia, and chorea expands the clinical phenotype and indicates that
98 tification of PDE10A mutations as a cause of chorea further motivates the study of cAMP signaling in
99                                  In Sydenham chorea, human mAbs derived from disease target the group
100 ptoms comprising various elements, including chorea, hyperactivity, tics, emotional lability, and obs
101 ars (SD = 13.3, range 13-63), beginning with chorea in 50%, focal lower limb dystonia in 42.5% and pa
102  the only approved drug for the treatment of chorea in HD, tetrabenazine (TBZ).
103          Citing the use of tetrabenazine for chorea in Huntington disease, adrenocorticotropic hormon
104 ease, with clinical manifestations including chorea, incoordination, ataxia, and dementia.
105 acterized by abnormal involuntary movements (chorea), intellectual impairment and selective neuronal
106                                   Sydenham's chorea is a CNS disorder and sequela of group A streptoc
107                                              Chorea is a hyperkinetic movement disorder resulting fro
108                               Paraneoplastic chorea is described in 16 patients: 11 with limited smal
109                                     Sydenham chorea is the major neurological manifestation of ARF bu
110 s on 16p11.2-q11.2; 9) the benign hereditary chorea locus on 14q; 10) the SCA type 5 locus on chromos
111                                 In addition, chorea mAb 24.3.1 and acute chorea sera induced calcium/
112                                              Chorea mAb specificity for purified brain tubulin was co
113          Nucleotide sequence analysis of the chorea mAb V(H) genes revealed that mAb 24.3.1 V(H) gene
114                                          The chorea mAbs labeled both intra- and extracellular Ags of
115    Our novel findings reveal that Sydenham's chorea mAbs target a 55-kDa brain protein with an N-term
116   Lysoganglioside G(M1) inhibited binding of chorea mAbs to tubulin and mAb reactivity with human cau
117 bitory effect for patients with little or no chorea may be due to additional degeneration of projecti
118 ter 27 AIds; the highest SIRs were noted for chorea minor (8.00), lupoid hepatitis (5.75), and Addiso
119                                              Chorea monoclonal antibodies showed specificity for mamm
120 despite the absence of documented Sydenham's chorea or rheumatic fever.
121           Other disorders such as Sydenham's chorea, or chorea related to systemic lupus erythematosu
122                             In patients with chorea, overnight conversion to deutetrabenazine therapy
123                       Patients had dystonia, chorea, parkinsonism, dysarthria, dysphagia, seizures, c
124 y recurrent and brief attacks of dystonia or chorea precipitated by sudden movements.
125 lies including mental retardation, dystonia, chorea, pyramidal signs and a compulsive and aggressive
126 ther disorders such as Sydenham's chorea, or chorea related to systemic lupus erythematosus and antip
127 nged contractions that may contribute to the chorea, rigidity, and dystonia that characterize Hunting
128                                              Chorea, rigidity, dystonia, and muscle weakness are char
129 ead to disease in disorders such as Sydenham chorea (SC) is not known.
130 tington's Disease Rating Scale total maximal chorea score and total motor score were efficacy end poi
131      Primary end point was the total maximal chorea score change from baseline (the average of values
132 tington disease and a baseline total maximal chorea score of 8 or higher (range, 0-28; lower score in
133 ea control, as measured by the total maximal chorea score, was maintained at week 1 and significantly
134 utetrabenazine group, the mean total maximal chorea scores improved from 12.1 (95% CI, 11.2-12.9) to
135 h their sensitivity in diagnosing Sydenham's chorea seems excellent, it is not yet possible to extrap
136 vels of anti-tubulin IgG were found in acute chorea sera and cerebrospinal fluid.
137     In addition, chorea mAb 24.3.1 and acute chorea sera induced calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein
138 rt disease and the neuronal cell in Sydenham chorea share a common streptococcal epitope GlcNAc and t
139  movements, including motor restlessness and chorea, slowing of voluntary movements and cognitive imp
140 hogenic role of autoantibodies in Sydenham's chorea, the prototypic post-streptococcal neuropsychiatr
141                                   Other than chorea, tics and obsessive-compulsive disorder, which co
142 ovement disorders include tremors, dystonia, chorea, tics, myoclonus, stereotypies, restless legs syn
143                                   Osler's On Chorea uniquely captures the transition period between t
144        Two had early Parkinsonian tremor and chorea was seen in four, although in two this was attrib
145                                              Chorea was the initial and most prominent symptom in 11
146 tetrabenazine, a novel molecule that reduces chorea, was well tolerated in a double-blind, placebo-co
147 t Huntington's disease patients with greater chorea were disinhibited is consistent with the theory t
148    Human mAbs and autoantibodies in Sydenham chorea were found to signal neuronal cells and activate
149 her (range, 0-28; lower score indicates less chorea) were enrolled from August 2013 to August 2014 an
150                 The mice develop progressive chorea with onset at approximately 9 weeks of age and wi
151 by 3.0 points (95% CI, 2.5-3.4) per year and chorea worsened by 0.3 point per year (95% CI, 0.1-0.5).

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